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Telemedicine may help Rural Trauma
Surgeons
avoid Medical Errors and unnecessary Patient
Transfers
Newswise — Telemedicine can help health care
providers in rural areas stabilize and treat
trauma victims when long distances or
inclement weather prevents immediate
transfer to an accredited trauma center.
Trauma surgeons in a telemedicine program in
Maine reported on their experience at the
95th annual Clinical Congress of the
American College of Surgeons through a
scientific exhibit presentation.
According to Rafael Grossmann, MD, FACS,
lead study author and general surgeon at
Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor, an
analysis of 59 telemedicine consultations
has shown fewer medical errors and a virtual
elimination of unnecessary transport
compared with telephone consultations.
Eastern Maine Medical Center is an American
College of Surgeons Level II trauma center
where trauma surgeons provide consultation
via telemedicine to 11 satellite centers in
northern and central Maine. That network
covers an area of approximately
26,000 square miles with a population of
approximately 462,000 between the Atlantic
coast and Canadian border. The area is
approximately the size of Vermont, New
Hampshire, and Massachusetts combined.
Telemedicine is two-way video and audio link
between two or more locations. The Eastern
Maine system, known as TeleTrauma, uses
high-resolution video with synchronized
audio via an Internet connection.
While telemedicine is not a new concept in
medicine, the study by Dr. Grossmann and
colleagues illustrates how surgeons are
using this technology to expedite emergency
care to underserved areas and how it can
impact care.
Specifically, their report collected data on
59 TeleTrauma consultations and an
unspecified number of telephone-only
consultations.
The level of trauma and age of patients were
similar in both groups, but the level of
medical errors in the TeleTrauma group was
about one-quarter of that in the telephone
consultation group. Unnecessary transfers
were seen only in the telephone consultation
group.
“There is a shortage of surgeon coverage for
rural areas in the United States, and this
is an improved way of communicating with
local providers and expanding the reach of
trained trauma surgeons in Maine,” according
to Dr. Grossmann.
The study authors also found that tele-medicine
improved surgeon preparation when receiving
cases, enhanced cooperation between
providers on both ends of the connection,
and increased satisfaction among patients
and families in understanding treatment
plans.
TeleTrauma has also proved valuable in
treating burn victims. “It is very difficult
to objectively quantify burns,” according to
Dr. Grossmann.
“Having
one of us look at the burn wounds over the
high-resolution camera, we can say, ‘Yes,
you can treat that locally with pain
control,’ or ‘This is way over your and our
heads. This patient will have to go to an
ABA/ACS * certified burn center.’ The
closest one is in Boston, and the helicopter
can go directly from the local hospital to
Boston.”
The study findings indicate telemedicine has
the potential to optimize trauma care
delivery, according to Dr. Grossmann.
“Given the times in which we live, with all
the technology available to us and the
difficulties regarding shortage of providers
and the cost of health care, that equation
really summarizes to me that a tool like
telemedicine, specifically TeleTrauma,
definitely has a role in providing trauma
care,” he said.
Barbara Sorondo, MD, MBA; Joanmarie Dietz
Pellegrini, MD, FACS; David Jay Burke, MD,
FACS; David Rydell, DO; Rony Ramia, MD; Amy
Fenwick, MD; Pret Bjorn, RN; Robert E.
Holmberg, MD, MPH, FACS; and Joseph Karem,
MS, also participated in the telemedicine
study.
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